1.Surgical treatment of papillary thyroid carcinoma involving larynx and trachea.
Tong Liang XIA ; Chen Yang XU ; Dong Min WEI ; Ye QIAN ; Wen Ming LI ; Xin Lang PAN ; Da Peng LEI
Chinese Journal of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2022;57(9):1059-1065
Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of surgical treatment of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) involving larynx and trachea. Methods: A total of 1 436 cases of thyroid malignant tumors were admitted to the Department of Otolaryngology, Qilu Hospital of Shandong University from 2004 to 2019, including 110 cases of PTC involving larynx and trachea, and of which 105 cases with complete follow-up data were retrospectively analyzed. There were 42 males and 63 females, with a male/female ratio of 1∶1.5, aged from 28 to 81 years. All lesions involved trachea, including 11 cases involving both trachea and larynx. Of those 83 cases underwent laryngeal and airway wall tumor excision, and 22 cases underwent radical tumor excision plus laryngeal and trachea repair. Extubation rate was analyzed and the postoperative survival curve of patients was analyzed by Kaplan-Meier method. Results: Among 105 cases, 16 cases underwent tracheotomy and 12 cases were successfully extubated. The overall 3- 5- and 10-year survival rates were 100.0%, 86.4% and 72.5%, and the disease-free survival rates were 93.1%, 81.6% and 57.7%, respectively. There was significant difference in survival curve between the two groups (χ2=4.21, P=0.040). The 5-year and 10-year survival rates were 94.6% and 77.3% in laryngeal and tracheal tumor exclusion group, and 85.7% and 51.4% in the radical tumor resection group. There was no significant difference in the survival curves between the two groups (χ2=3.50, P=0.061). Conclusion: PTC patients with laryngeal and tracheal involvement can achieve long survival and good quality of life through reasonable surgical treatment.
Female
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Humans
;
Larynx/surgery*
;
Male
;
Neoplasm Invasiveness
;
Quality of Life
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Thyroid Cancer, Papillary/surgery*
;
Thyroid Neoplasms/pathology*
;
Trachea/surgery*
2.Situation analysis of outcome indicators of randomized controlled trials of traditional Chinese medicine in treatment of hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage in recent three years.
Wan-Qing DU ; Min JIA ; Min WANG ; Xin-Yang ZHANG ; Wei-Wei JIAO ; Qian CHEN ; Lin LEI ; Jia-Yu DUAN ; Chen-Guang TONG ; Wei SHEN ; Xiao LIANG ; Xin-Zhi CHEN ; Da-Hua WU ; Yun-Ling ZHANG ; Xing LIAO
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2021;46(18):4601-4614
The study aims to analyze the outcome indicators of randomized controlled trial(RCT) of traditional Chinese medicine(TCM) in the treatment of hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage(HICH) in recent three years, and thus provide suggestions for the future studies in this field. Four English databases, four Chinese databases and two online registration websites of clinical trials were searched. The RCTs published between January 2018 and September 2020 were screened. The risk of bias was assessed and outcome measures were classified. A total of 151 839 articles were retrieved, of which 44 RCTs were included for analysis after screening. The outcome measures of the included RCTs were classified into 7 categories, among which the symptoms/signs category showed the highest reporting rate. National Institute of Health stroke scale(72.73%) was the most frequently reported outcome indicator, while the vo-lume of intracerebral hemorrhage determined by computerized tomography(36.36%) was the most frequently reported lab test outcome. Most studies collect the outcomes at the end of treatment, while 9 studies reported long-term outcomes 3 months or more after onset. Compared with those of international clinical trials, the application of some of the outcomes was reasonable, focusing on patients' symptoms, quality of life and objective outcomes. However, there were still several problems: unclear primary and secondary outcome measures, insufficient attention to long-term prognosis, insufficient attention to social function, few TCM outcomes, lack of measurement blindness and the use of unreasonable composite outcomes. It is recommended that researchers should rationally design the outcome indicators of clinical trials and develop the core outcome set.
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
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Humans
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Intracranial Hemorrhage, Hypertensive/drug therapy*
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Quality of Life
;
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
3.Chinese Medicine Treatment Prolonged Survival in Small Cell Lung Cancer Patients: A Clinical Observation.
Xiao-Qing XU ; Wen-Qi DENG ; Da-Yang WANG ; Meng LI ; Dong-Lei KOU ; Pei-Tong ZHANG
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2021;27(7):496-501
OBJECTIVE:
To evaluate the effect of Chinese medicine (CM) treatment on survival time and quality of life (QOL) in patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC).
METHODS:
This was an exploratory and prospective clinical observation. Patients diagnosed with SCLC receiving CM treatment were included and followed up every 3 months. The primary outcome was overall survival (OS), and the secondary outcomes were progression-free survival (PFS) and QOL.
RESULTS:
A total of 136 patients including 65 limited-stage SCLC (LS-SCLC) patients and 71 extensive-stage SCLC (ES-SCLC) patients were analyzed. The median OS of ES-SCLC patients was 17.27 months, and the median OS of LS-SCLC was 40.07 months. The survival time was 16.27 months for SCLC patients with brain metastasis, 9.83 months for liver metastasis, 13.43 months for bone metastasis, and 18.13 months for lung metastasis. Advanced age, pleural fluid, liver and brain metastasis were risk factors, while longer CM treatment duration was a protective factor. QOL assessment indicated that after 6 months of CM treatment, scores increased in function domains and decreased in symptom domains.
CONCLUSION
CM treatment might help prolong OS of SCLC patients. Moreover, CM treatment brought the trend of symptom amelioration and QOL improvement. These results provide preliminary evidence for applying CM in SCLC multi-disciplinary treatment.
4.Prognostic value of the extravascular lung water and pulmonary vascular permeability indices in severe adult respiratory distress syndrome managed with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation.
Jin WEI ; Lei HUANG ; Lei XU ; Xiao-Min HU ; Xin-Jing GAO ; Zhi-Bo LI ; Da-Wei DUAN ; Peng WU ; Yu-Heng LANG ; Wen-Qing GAO ; Ying-Wu LIU ; Meng NING ; Tong LI
Chinese Medical Journal 2020;133(20):2501-2503
5.In Vivo Biocompatibility and Improved Compression Strength of Reinforced Keratin/Hydroxyapatite Scaffold.
Jie FAN ; Meng Yan YU ; Tong da LEI ; Yong Heng WANG ; Fu Yuan CAO ; Xiao QIN ; Yong LIU
Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine 2018;15(2):145-154
A rapid freezing/lyophilizing/reinforcing process is suggested to fabricate reinforced keratin/hydroxyapatite (HA) scaffold with improved mechanical property and biocompatibility for tissue engineering. The keratin, extracted from human hair, and HA mixture were rapidly frozen with liquid nitrogen and then lyophilized to prepare keratin/HA laminar scaffold. The scaffold was then immersed in PBS for reinforcement treatment, and followed by a second lyophilization to prepare the reinforced keratin/HA scaffold. The morphology, mechanical, chemical, crystal and thermal property of the keratin/HA scaffold were investigated by SEM, FTIR, XRD, DSC, respectively. The results showed that the keratin/HA scaffold had a high porosity of 76.17 ± 3%. The maximum compressive strength and compressive modulus of the reinforced scaffold is 0.778 and 3.3 MPa respectively. Subcutaneous implantation studies in mice showed that in vivo the scaffold was biocompatible since the foreign body reaction seen around the implanted scaffold samples was moderate and became minimal upon increasing implantation time. These results demonstrate that the keratin/HA reinforced scaffold prepared here is promising for biomedical utilization.
Animals
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Compressive Strength
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Durapatite
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Foreign-Body Reaction
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Freeze Drying
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Hair
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Humans
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Mice
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Nitrogen
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Porosity
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Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared
;
Tissue Engineering
6.Performance of Multiple Risk Assessment Tools to Predict Mortality for Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome with Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation Therapy: An External Validation Study Based on Chinese Single-center Data.
Lei HUANG ; Tong LI ; Lei XU ; Xiao-Min HU ; Da-Wei DUAN ; Zhi-Bo LI ; Xin-Jing GAO ; Jun LI ; Peng WU ; Ying-Wu LIU ; Song WANG ; Yu-Heng LANG
Chinese Medical Journal 2016;129(14):1688-1695
BACKGROUNDThere has been no external validation of survival prediction models for severe adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) therapy in China. The aim of study was to compare the performance of multiple models recently developed for patients with ARDS undergoing ECMO based on Chinese single-center data.
METHODSA retrospective case study was performed, including twenty-three severe ARDS patients who received ECMO from January 2009 to July 2015. The PRESERVE (Predicting death for severe ARDS on VV-ECMO), ECMOnet, Respiratory Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation Survival Prediction (RESP) score, a center-specific model developed for inter-hospital transfers receiving ECMO, and the classical risk-prediction scores of Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II and Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) were calculated. In-hospital and six-month mortality were regarded as the endpoints and model performance was evaluated by comparing the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC).
RESULTSThe RESP and APACHE II scores showed excellent discriminate performance in predicting survival with AUC of 0.835 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.659-1.010, P = 0.007) and 0.762 (95% CI, 0.558-0.965, P = 0.035), respectively. The optimal cutoff values were risk class 3.5 for RESP and 35.5 for APACHE II score, and both showed 70.0% sensitivity and 84.6% specificity. The excellent performance of these models was also evident for the pneumonia etiological subgroup, for which the SOFA score was also shown to be predictive, with an AUC of 0.790 (95% CI, 0.571-1.009, P = 0.038). However, the ECMOnet and the score developed for externally retrieved ECMO patients failed to demonstrate significant discriminate power for the overall cohort. The PRESERVE model was unable to be evaluated fully since only one patient died six months postdischarge.
CONCLUSIONSThe RESP, APCHAE II, and SOFA scorings systems show good predictive value for intra-hospital survival of ARDS patients treated with ECMO in our single-center evaluation. Future validation should include a larger study with either more patients' data at single-center or by integration of domestic multi-center data. Development of a scoring system with national characteristics might be warranted.
Adult ; Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation ; adverse effects ; methods ; Female ; Humans ; Kaplan-Meier Estimate ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Prognosis ; ROC Curve ; Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Adult ; mortality ; pathology ; therapy ; Retrospective Studies ; Risk Assessment
7.Construction of epithelia membrane protein 1 gene-deficient in human fetal nucleus pulposus cell model by lentivirus -mediated RNA interference.
Ming HU ; Yuan-Zheng MA ; Da-Wei LI ; Feng-Shan HUANG ; Da-Yu YANG ; Tong-Lei YANG ; Yu-Chuan LIU
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2012;25(10):842-845
OBJECTIVETo construct Epithelia Membrane Protein 1 gene-deficient in human fetal nucleus pulposus model by lentivirus-mediated RNA interference for building a platform for illustrating the biomechanisms role of EMP-1 during human intervertebral disc degeneration.
METHODSThe lentivirus vector with shRNA targeting EMP-1 mRNA was transected into 293FT cells by liposome. Then the lentivirus supernatant was obtained and used for infecting human fetal nucleus pulposus. The expression of GFP was observed under fluorescence microscope after 48 h. The viral particles were collected at 72 h after transfection. The efficacy of gene interference was tested by Western blot and Real-time RT-PCR. Analysis the results of the fluorescent microscope scenes and get the average values of EMP-1/GAPDH by detected the interference efficiency of various interference DNA sequences with western blot and semi quantitative RT-PCR methods.
RESULTSThe lentivirns with high titer were obtained and the EMP-1 gene deficient cell strains were obtained. Semi quantitative RT-PCR and Western blot proved the average values of EMP-1/GAPDH decreased from 0.46 to 0.32 and 0.5 to 0.25 (P < 0.01).
CONCLUSIONLentivirus packaging technology can be mastered skillfully. EMP-1 gene-deficient cell models are successfully established.
Fetus ; HEK293 Cells ; Humans ; Intervertebral Disc ; metabolism ; Lentivirus ; genetics ; Neoplasm Proteins ; genetics ; RNA Interference ; Receptors, Cell Surface ; genetics ; Transfection
8.Ecological-geographic landscapes of natural plague foci in China Ⅵ.biological characteristics of natural vectors of Yesinia pestis
Zheng-Da GONG ; Xin YU ; Qi-Yong LIU ; Rui-Yu YE ; Liang LU ; Lei XU ; Jin-Tong ZHANG ; Chao LI ; Xue-Li BAI ; Xi-Ye FANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2012;33(8):818-822
Objective To characterize the biological characteristics of natural vectors of Yesinia (Y.) pestis in China.Methods Species and genera of natural vectors of Y.pestis in China and their faunal distribution were characterized with modem insect taxonomic techniques.The ecological roles of natural vectors of Y.pestis in natural plague foci were determined according to insect ecological experiments.Results There were 63 species of natural vectors of Y.pestis including 28 major reservoirs and 35 secondary ones.Conclusion The biology characteristics of major vectors on Y.pestis and their roles in natural plague foci were defined.
9.Ecological-geographic landscapes of natural plague foci in China Ⅶ.Typing of natural plague foci
Xi-Ye FANG ; Rui-Fu YANG ; Lei XU ; Qi-Yong LIU ; Xing-Qi DONG ; Rong-Zu ZHANG ; Xin YU ; Chang-Yu QIN ; Zheng-Da GONG ; Dong-Sheng ZHOU ; Yu-Jun CUI ; Yan-Jun LI ; Rui-Yu YE ; Liang LU ; Jin-Tong ZHANG ; Gui-Chang LI
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2012;33(11):1144-1150
Objective To group and characterize natural plague foci in China.Methods A novel two-class typing method as well as a three-indication nomenclature method were established to group and characterize the natural plague foci,on the basis of eco-geographical landscapes of plague foci,genetics of Yersinia pestis,zoology of rodent reservoirs and the entomology of flea vectors.Results A total of 12 distinct natural plague foci (including 19 subtypes) as well as their biological features were characterized.Conclusion Natural plague foci in China were grouped and characterized in this study.
10.Diagnostic value of neuronal nitric oxide synthase antibody for clinically suspected Becker muscular dystrophy.
Xi-Hua LI ; Lei ZHAO ; Yan WU ; Jie WU ; Da-Ke HE ; Xiao-Qing LIU
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2011;13(4):288-291
OBJECTIVEImmunohistochemistry using antibodies to dystrophin is the pathological basis for the differential diagnosis of Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD and BMD). In rare cases, however, labelling dystrophin on sarcolemma is equivocal and similar to that observed in controls. This makes the diagnosis of BMD difficult. This study aimed to explore the diagnostic value of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) antibody for clinically suspected BMD.
METHODSImmunohistochemical staining was performed on muscle specimens of 5 cases of BMD with positive expression of Dys-C (3 cases had a confirmed diagnosis of BMD, 2 cases were clinically suspected as BMD) by using dystrophin and nNOS antibodies. Normal muscle specimens from the children with fracture were used as controls.
RESULTSCompared with the controls, the expression of Dys-R, Dys-C and Dys-N was markedly reduced and nNOS was not expressed on sarcolemma in the three cases of definitely diagnosed BMD. The two cases of clinically suspected as BMD had a complete absence of sarcolemmal nNOS, even if had a similar expression of dystrophin on sarcolemma to the controls.
CONCLUSIONSnNOS antibody staining can be used for a definite diagnosis in children with clinically suspected BMD who have the almost normal expression of dystrophin.
Child ; Child, Preschool ; Dystrophin ; analysis ; chemistry ; Humans ; Immunohistochemistry ; Infant ; Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne ; diagnosis ; metabolism ; Nitric Oxide Synthase Type I ; analysis

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